Gleaner_19691017

~ETW COLLIGI: OF AOCNIESTER
".;
XXV - No. 3
'rusfees accept
tfenderson Law
This Memorandum is not. prompted by past evtnt.a on our tllmpus
d by any antieipal<!d future ev~nl$ but has been prepared In com­,
>co with an enactment by the New York Stat<! Lcglslnlure signed
"! law by the Goven>or on A1>rll 21, !969. The law requires "that all
egea and unjver$ilie• In t.hia St.nte adopt rules nud regulntlons for
maintenance ot public order and a program for the enforcement
reol.n The same Act rtqulres that such rules and regulation• be
It with the ~!<>gents of tho Stat<! of New York and the New York
te Commi.aiooer of Education within ninety days alter the date of
Ac:L 't In the int.erHts of aimplicity, whene\-er the word .. mi!mber'· is
d in this Memorandum, it ia intended to include faculty, atudents.
J!l and their viaitora.
The regulation• wbleh are oet forth below are baaed upon:
1) the truth that the rithta of eaeh individual and troup carry
~ them corresponding obligations (including resp<lct for the rithts
'others) and that the rights and obligations are as Inseparable as
t. two aides of a eotn;
< 2) the Augustinian concept that peace is the tranqulllty of order:
I
• 3) the <onviction that on a college campus, of all place.. peroua­\
must be e!!eet~ through reaoon and diiCUalon, not through
~e or intimidation.
' They also recognize that faculty as well as students must take
ponalbility for the emotive uae of language, e.g., the promotion trevolution,. and the eurajng o! our society as .-.radically immoral/~
y if the rhe-toric or despair and violence. as well aa the stimulation
nuna.tw:e, aick reapon&e-& to the preaaurca ol modctrn IIC(! io onded
we hope to have ren.l aocinl progress. Only then can Nnzareth
to make its proper contribution as a college which is to provlde
ure and peaceful atmoaphere where. people cAn pursue an unde.r-­o!
the meaning ot humtt.n exiate.nce: in aU its phaJK's.
These regulations will be applied with finnne88 but with justice.
Administration of the College ...,.,ognius the light, and indeed
need, for members to expreae themselves pro and eon on isauea
int.ra-mural and extra-mural but insists that auch exprusion be
'eel on in sueh manner that (1) none of the nonnal operations oC
College is in any way impeded, and (2) none of the lichta of any
ber of the community lo abrogal<!d.
For its part, the Administration will make renewed efforts to
'ntain and enc.ourage open linea oC eommu.nieaUon wlth ""d among
members and segments oC tho community.
eshmen Parents
ive October 17
first Freshnw1 Parents'
end will begin next Friday,
ber 17 with. a joint dance:
dinner. It is not necea.snry
girls bring dntea, but they
allowed.
rdered t ickets ($6 each) may
picked from mothen at the
• during the week before the
.:00 p.m.: P•nel diseuaion and
tbnee to rm.d out viewa on
OOM A.~D TtiE COL­GE
STUDENT by Slater Hel­Ma.
lone, P~sident; M rt. Su­te
Grnham, Asst. Denn i Sister
tbleen, Dean or StudMts;
gr. Shannon, Chaplain.
4:30 p.m. susgesl<!d activity:
pus tours.
6:00 p.m.: Coekt.t.ils: ln·and
oors, Kearney, Medaille, and
y COUrt)'llrdS.
1:00 p.m.: Dinner.
nasium, Student Union.
t:OO p.m. • 12:30 a.m. Dance:
12:30 a.m. MAss: Alma Mater
pel.
Among the p<lople rcopon•lble
r these plans are: Mr. Michaol
land, director of developmant
~29): Mary Ann liartnett,
homore: Mr. and Mro. Albert
m, eo--ehainnt-n or the event,
i>d lolr. and Mrs. A. J. Thomall,
l-president.s of the Nau.reth
olle«< Parents' A-lation.
Rt::GULATIONS
The following actiono by an
member of the community, acting
either alone or in concert with
others, or by any orraniz.ation.
are prohibil<!d:
I) Interference with attepted
nonnal func:tiona or a.c:tivi·
ties of the College, includ·
ing i~ administrative, edu­eational,
religious, cultural,
athletic or other progmms,
either by bo·ench of the
pe."'.c:e, phye:ic.1d obstrudion,
coercion, threata, inllmJda ..
tion or terror, or by noise,
tumult or other disturbance;
2) Physical deotruetion of any
College property:
3) Unauthorized ouupaney of
College !acililiu or block­in
aecesa: to or departure
from sueh tacilititli
4 I Interference with approved
nod authorized trafllc on the
College campus, either pe·
destrinn or mot.o•• vahicle:
6) lnllingement by physical
ob$truction, ~o c reI on,
threats, intimidation. ter­ror
or by any ot.htr means
if the lights of membera
and/or other authorized
persons to gain ac:ctu to or
depart from any College
facility for any authorized
purpose;
G) Picketing or dcmonatrnting,
with the use of obl(ene or
indecent lnngunge, or with
signs or bnnnc111 containing
aueh Jnngungc, or with
signs or banne~ or such
size., material or tonstrue·
tion as to ~ft'ate a haz.ard
to persons or property:
(Co n llnu~ on P03e 4)
October 17, 1969
Airlines cutout
half-price fares
WASIIINGTON - (CPS) -
Airline youth tn.re1 wi11 continue,
but not nt U\0 eurrc.nt hall-price
discount.
The H\'t.·mnn Civil Aeronnuties
Board (CA 8) d~ided here this
month that while the lares, which
enable peroono 12-22 to Oy stand­by
at low coal, were fair in
principle, a.irlint:t ahould be a.t ..
lowed to raloe them to 60 per
cent of the resulnr coach fare.
The l'enson: 1tcep wnge settle­ments,
more ex);Klneive fuel, and
higher landing rees have lowenl
airline profite exc-c.asivcly, no­cording
t.o the CAB, and price
increases in both regular and
promotional diec:ounta are neces­sary
to inere.aa re,·enue. The
major air tarrlt-rt offering spe ..
cial yout.h f'&rtl Americ:.n, Con­tinental,
North we 1 t, T\VA,
United, E3attrn, and West~rn­ore
exp<leted to take advantage
of tho Cnb na1ing- nnd 1'1lise t.heir
prices. Tho new rtl\ea will Lake
eflect Oct. I.
The youth Care issue was
foreed to a hend last January
when several bua companies. all
of which had loot business to the
airlines on aeeount of t.be b.re5y
filed suit to make the CAB lilsten
to their &.f1tUrnt.nt.e that the dis­counts
wtre Illegal.
The Fi!th Clreuit Court. of Ap­peals
in New Orleans, agreelng
with tome or the arguments,
ordered the CA II to inveatigatc,
nnd CAll oxnminer Arthur S.
Present subsequently found the
fares to be •'unjulllY discrimin:t­tory"
and In violation of th~ Fed­eral
Avintion Act of 1958.
P resent recommended the f:uu
be abolished, but the CAB de·
layed action when protest was
r<!gistered by the National Stu·
dent Association, the Campus
Amerienn• for Ocrn<>c:rnt.ie A~
tion, the Nat..ion&l Student Mar­keting
CorPOrntion. tL11d many
students nnd Jmrcnts who deluged
CAB offit<ls with lettei"S •
Thre<~ measures were intro­duced
ln Congrtas in support of
the low-cost youth (area.
In it& feietnt decision, the CAB
conc:lodt!fl, contrary to Present's
earlier findlnp, that the tares
were not diKrimln.atory, but
bene!illed nil trovelert!. By en­gendering
development of a new
mnrket. they 11have eontributed
sizably to mnklng modem equip ...
ment and con\·~nient schedules
more broadly available," t.he
CAB said.
"It is c.lf'ar that the youth
standby !areo have gen•rated a
significant llmount of ne.w traf­fic,"
it said. ..The 12 .. 22 years
age gTOUPI arc more re-sponsive
t.o price than it the market as
a whole. MOr'(!0\'tr1 in addition
to the short.-run geuerativc err~t
oC youth ftu-ea, the longtcrm
traffic lmJmet nlao is signi!icnnt.
By encournging J>ersona to trnvel
b)' air at nn early age th~ fares
will ineulutc habill • . . whic::h
,.;11 be reflected In a r<!ady ac­ceptance
of air travel throughout
the.ir adult li\·u."
Vietnam Moratorium:
Only a beginning
by Shirley LaPiana
According to Karen Landiak, who heads the Nazareth
workers for the Vietnam Moratorium. the activities on Octo­ber
15 represent an attempt to gain on~mpus solidarity in
support of an immediate withdrawal from Vietnam.
Nazareth and Fisher representatives have been meeting
with other members of Rocheslet· Mobilization, including
RIT. U of R, Brockport, and Geneseo. In preparation for the
day of concern, students have l.>ecn researching the war,
including statistics, stands taken by various officials, State
Depm'tment bulletins and bills on the floor in Congress.
This information will be synthesized, printed, and made
available to students and anyone else intet·ested in learning
the various facts and opinions on the war, both pro and con.
Petitions to end the war will be available in the cafeterias
and outside the Union on i\Iondny and Tuesday for student
signatures and will be sent to local, state. and federal of­ficials.
Two weeks ago, the Student
Council \''as .ppproa.ched nnd gnv~
ita urulnlmous aus>port. to the dny
of penoo, 01 wt'.ll ns \"OUng n do­untion
or fifty dol1nrs. Although
\'arioue ~t-hooJ officials have also
been taJ)proachtd. there is no ad·
mini1tra\h·e aupport for the mor·
atorium. Each fac:ult).,. member
wa. eonta~l pt':l'S()nally in an
atttmp&. to gain support a.nd tn·
dortemtnt for the statement of
purposej nnd a student rep~sent­a\
ivc mt't ·with interested fBeulty
n1embert lost Thunwlay morning.
The Vit'Lnnm Mon~torh1m on
October IG is only a beg-inning,
l'L~ordlng to K:u~n. TheN' nre
plane for a two--day nntionnl
mnrch on \Vaahington in No\·~m­ber.
a three-da)' obsel"\•:tn~e in
Dectmbtr and 80 on until the: war
ends.
Tht Monltorium began T11esda)
noon at tht> ft:a.gpole near the
Arts C<nt~r. With the ftag at
holf-staff, thr "'ading of th• war
dead began, to continue into
Wl'<ln•sdny. 1'uosdny night there
wns o Nntot·cth~Fisher rally in
the Arts Centtr courl)•nrd Col·
Jowe·d by a. candlelight procession
to Fisher in complete silen<fl.
This terminated at Keame)' Au·
ditorium. wMn • short liturgy
..,.. held and the reading of the
-r dtod bepn. After the lit·
urgy the"' wns o ailent dilsp!'nal
and tho twenty-four hour fast
lx!gnn. 'l,he money not spent on
food during the fast will he col·
l<'tt.e<l nnd sent to the chlldren'8
IIOSI)ltal In South Vietnam; those
not fasting we.re uked to mntch
the money epent on food and to
dona~ it to the same eause.
Yu terday morning, the letter­writing
bepn on Monda)' in eon·
nection with Ope.ration Tieup
continued. This is a mo\·emtnt to
ti~ up phone lines and mail strv­i""
into Washington on Wedne•·
day n1 a means or protestJng the
wnr. 1'he Nazareth program be·
l(an nt 9:80 in the Arts Center
with hopes thnl Ron Young, n
nationnl mobiliur, would be
nvallablo as a keynote ap<laker.
The format to be followed waa
th• same ao that used on NSA
rla)• Jut year~ there were optn
m1k('l and a ~nel eonsiltinr or a
black mnn from Rochester, who
t;a\"t his views on the war; a (;t
juat b&ck from eight<!en month•
in Vietnam: 3 c.onsen•:\tiv~ who
hotko President Nixon: and n llb­flml
who opposes him. Thl1 ~ml·
rd nL nbout 12:30. Then thoo·o
wns n mnl'ch to Fisher, where n
pi"Ogmm was held fJ'om 1:30 to
3:00. At 3:00 there was Rn int~r ..
foith O('rvl<fl Collowed by a houae­to-
hou~ c:anv:LSS with the lnltn·
tion or making $ignft~nt onf"o-to­one
c:ont.a.tts with peoplco not di"
tctly in,·oh·ed in the Moratorium.
Th~ da.y of obse.r"\--ance ended whh
an 8:30 pe~ce Mli!IS at Fisher.
The le<lurllf os chameleon. Be unenlightened in print OS well os
in pictur•. S.. pog• two.
Page Twa
editorial:
(Where there's smoke, there's fire)
Winds blow, colors change, leaves drop ... the tempera­ture
Jowers. Such is the progress of events as nature pre­pares
herself for a new season.
Rumors blow, ideas change, ideals drop ... but the
temperature rises. This is the impression I was given as I
ran through the events of my life on the Nazareth campus
during tile past couple of weeks.
The atmosphere has disturbed me, has caused me to
stop my running, to wonder, to question what is happening
here. For what is Nazareth-her administration, her fac­ulty,
her student&-preparing herself? Will the new season
be one of construction or destruction? of optimism or pes­simism?
of intelligent examination of situations or un­informed
backing of popular ideas 7
All this smoke on Nazareth campus I am referring to
is an exciting and welcomed sign to see. It seems to be an
indication that the members of this institution of higher
education are seriously considering truths and non-truths
that lie outside the realm of books alone. The sparks we
have seen flying affirm the existence of new ideas, of an
openness to change.
Yet, do we want our campus to turn into a society like
that in Fnrenheit 451? I am afraid that some of these
sparks may become uncontrollable. I! they land on "dead­wood"---<>
n individuals unprepared or too lethargic to think
about the issues truly involved, the result may be a con­flagration
none of us could possibly handle.
The popular response to this week's Peace Moratorium
seemed to exemplify how some people may be persuaded to
jump onto the bandwagon without thoroughly examining
the principles involved. Nationally the day was designed to
be a political move-even if it necessitated expressing ideas
at the expense of national reputation. Even though U.S.
involvement in Vietnam has earned much warranted criti­cism,
the issues involved may not be accurately presented in
a partisan movement. When facts are thrust together in
an arbitrary manner, when uninformed people wear ann­bands
as a pseudo-effort to be conscientious, the impressions
yielded may be ultimately more misleading than deliberate
lies.
Smoke and flames may distort our vision. In my opin­ion,
llf-Day was more than a test of strength for anti-war
fooling; it (nlong with many othe1· cun-..nt issues) Is a chal­lenge
to examine thoroughly the ideas we decide to support
and-then-to communicate them; it is a warning not to be
so caught up in the heatrof-the-day that we fail to be aware
of the forces that affect the way we feel, the way we think,
and the way we act.
ETA slates GRE
PRINCETON, NJ. - Educa­tional
Teatlng Service announced
that undergraduates and othera
preparing te go te gnduate
tehool may take the Graduate
Record &xeminationa on any o·f
llix different test datea durinr
the ~urrent aeademic year.
The rirat teatinr date ror the
GRE is October 25, 1969. Seorea
rrom thia administration will be
reported te the rraduate scl>ooit
before December I. After Oc­tober
lOt there is no guara.ntee
that applications ror the Oct<>ber
test date can be prooeued.
The othtr five teat datet are
Oe<:ember 13, 1969; January 17,
February 28, April 26 and July
11, 1970. Equivalent late fee and
reg;stration dea.dlineo apply to
these dates. Choice ot teat dates
ahould be determined by the re·
quinmente ot graduate scl>oolo
'Ibe Ot .. MI' ll DUbllabtd WHJtty­enry
Wtd:nMd&J-dgrfnw the nplar
t.eadem.lc ,_r at N~ CoU•1• ot
::.~='r~~ ~::;·.-~
~&dltol"t ... -.- t..o.l.U. O.Nwe
Nora BJeke)'
N..,. FAilor , .. .. $hlrlu ~lana
F..wr. r.dJtor --·- Aa.Pla Sc-ufta.
Art Editor _ &oaaS. K•tJa
rums __ Qar1• xn...,.
Pho~ Editor
Mary Ann c..t:u.lll
News Phl>tot'rapNr P•ula S.tt.TIY
Splrttoat Advlaor _ Ma.,. Doorolo.t
~\ 10 u.. S.A. Slrlaroa llG:t'Oh7
B~ KaM.~W L:t7 M•M
~W. s~,:-Bi~i:,":ln~S:~~".;
~:"M'::.~ li.M; .i::aMH'!'~!!::
AK.artt hSye a"l"' "" - J'itoht1,a £Qhrt.
JU'*""" o·sn ...
Adnrililn.r M'a.rla BeTIUo
Dl•ulbuUon ···- ·-·-.. J~n• O'Brlen,
Ka'hy ~wlq
,_ ~ la • --"" of tiM
lrd
IAU offers
scholarships
Five scl>olanhi}a of $1,000
ucll ue available to atudente
applying to the Institute tor
American Univenltlea for an ac ..
ademic yenr at Alx-en-Provence,
in aouthem France. The lnsti·
tute, charurt<l by the University
of the State of New York, and
under t.he auspicea of the Univer­sity
of Alx-Maraellle, founded in
1409, ia designed tor American
lllldupduatea who wish to
study abroad and ha,·e credit
transferred to their home u_njver­aities.
The above echolarshipa nre
divided among majora in Frencll,
Literature, Fine ArU, Blttery,
Social Selences and MediUrra·
nean Area Studies. (They are not
available to otudenta enrolled In
the l.A.U. Summer Prognm or
the I.A.U. One Semester Pro­gnm).
In addition te the above
awards, 25 tuition grants and a
French Government adlolarahip
of over $1,000 reserved for
French maJors. are awarded oath
year.
Aix-en-Provenoo Is located 1?
miles north of Marseille within
easy reath of the Frencll Riviera,
ski reaoru in the French Alpo.
the Roman cities of Aries, Nlmes
and Orange, and It only a tew
hours trom Spain, Italy and
Switurland.
Information abeut the lnotitu~
for American Unlveraitlea Ia
available in eolleg<l libraries, for­eign
at.udy offices or French De·
partmente.
AppllcatloD$ should be made
by airmail directly te:
lntUtute Jor American
Universities
The Director,
2 bis. rue du Bon-Puteur
GLEANER
Undergrad defines
judicial body
October 6th
To the editora:
The tollowlng, in antwer to
liThe a.e.niors who queatlon U n·
der&'rad move" (Gleaner, Oct.. !,
1969), Ia a written tta~ment
concerning the purpose and aims
of the judicial board which Ia
now being propoaed by the stu­dent
pvern:me.nt. It ia not. a
jaraphrue of any NSA brochure;
neither Is it a at.atement reflec::t.­ing
Nntareth thinking, tor a.s
yet I have not heard Naza,..,tb
thinking. It is my opinion.
To me the purpoae for the
formation or a judicial body Is
clear. Presently Undet·grnd ex­ercises
only ita executive and
leg;alative powers. The proposal
or a judicial body is an enact­ment
of the power granted in
Article Xll or the February L969
revisions of the Constitution.
What I think was mlaunder­~
in the questio~ to the
college community was the clause
''separate. Crom counci l". This
separateness was intended to
mean that the atandlng members
or the judiciary body would not
be members of the Stlldent Coun­cil,
the leg;alntive body. To me
this Ia very logical. Nowhere, to
my knowledge, does an exec:utl\~e
or leplative body interpret iu
own polit:iea as a judiciary. Fur­thermore,
I do not feel that it
would be wiae for this body of
which I am speaking to be com·
poaed of penono alrudy ~rving
ao oftleens or the Undergn.d As­sociation
simply because as offi­cers
they already have two pos'i­tiont
or reaponolbility. (!~. they
aro chalmwt or a specific com·
mittee, or a representative of a
speciflc group, or an executive,
nnd they are olao membert or
the legislative body.) Therefore,
they ohould not, and reuonably
cannot.. assume a third major
duty. This judlclnl h<wiy lo then
the Court of Student Council and
doea not neceuarily eliminate
the need for 1M court concvned
solely with resident polieies.
The main reason for the ques­tionnaire,
concerning organiza­tional
and functional aspects or
this body, U..t wu g;,·en to 1M
enll~ c:om.munity, not just. Jtu­dentt..
was to determine whether
or not it was felt that this body
should be organl!ed and function
Cor the entire commwtity. notjust
student&. As stated in the Undet'-­grad
Constitution, the judicial
body Ia restricted to students
only. We who Initiated the pro­poll!
critieiu thlt limitation as
being anted.iluvian. I believe that
a colleg<l is not three distinct en·
tities, but rather, one community,
that tharing goala can ahare
meanL
To those insulted st-njof'l who
felt they eould not comment on,
but could question the wisdom of
14something about whic.h we know
nothing'', I would like te ask,
'.-Wbtre we-re )'OU on Septe:mber
29th when Undergrad held a
speelnl meeting to Inform you on
our thoughts and to hear your
thinking in the matter!" From
1M tone of )'Our letter I ret the
feeling that you had been frus­trated
In your ~ttemptc to get
information and clarification.
How come you didn't uk t
Unny MeManut
Wahl Bros.
has new
booths.
Come and
enjoy our
roast beef
sandwich.
Best In the
areal
October I 7, 1 0
"O pposm· g v·1 ewpom· t s . . ., I;-
Nazareth recently hosted two
oppo$i:ng viewpoints on the issue
ot atudent involvment.. Thurtday,
October 2, Dr. Harold Taylor,
former president of Sorn Law­renee
College, oxpresaed hlo faith
in today's student& in his tpeeth
"The Meaninr of the Sludent
Revolution", and William A.
Rusher, publisher of the Notional
Review, presented ••Have Stu­dent&
Gone Crazy!" on Tuesday
evening October 7. Both tpeakera
were mainly c.onetmed with the
naUon's "militant'' students.
Taylor views the students as
lhe "age_nta of social t.hange".
He feels that in order for the
social structure to achieve per·
fccUon, those who nre part o!
the structu.re: must be involved
in it. planning. Taylor'o main
concern is "not the 10\t that is
mlllt.ant. but the other 90\1. who
are willing te accept aocloty the
way it is11• Re feela that the
otudenu of today are becoming
more in,·oh•ed with the iuues of
the times and are unwtlllng to
support those practices which aro
infringing upon their belids -
opeclficaUy the Viet Nam war.
Students are aloo concuned with
the rights of the blaeks and are
Impatient with the progress that
has been made In this and many
ot.he.r areas. Another ~nce.m of
the -dentt Is academic refo
Taylor feels that the uni
tyste.m.s have improved mort C
the twe>-year period when
dent$ have been more radl
than it ever has betol"fl. Ove
re(Orml have fiMJiy taken p
The studenta are ait.ting on
ministrat.ive counc:Hs And hel
to mnke curriculum decisions
in ...,neral, etre<:ting the clan 8
they ... k.
Rusher presents a more ~ I
miatic view ot the student si 1
tion. Be feels tltat ttudents t
Inexperienced and naive re t
ing tho main iasues ot the ti~
History repeat& itaelf and stu~\
agression has happened belo ,
Through the ages students ht e
been rebelling for the sake J
rebelling without looking &t
undulying issues. He cited
Nazi youth rnov~ment ae an
ample of ttudent enthusi
lacking enton:ement of
ideals. Rusher feels 1M attack
present values baa taken
fonn of "ethical relati ·
(what is right for you may
be right Cor ou). He says
the danger In the preoent si
don is that the new leal has to
down the enforcing mechanis
tor the eo<:lety and has not
tempted to construct anything
"'place them.
... Parallel Lines
Sometimes Mee
Dr. Harold Taylor, the noted liberal, upset some N~ •
reth students by suggesting that only 10 per cent of th
student population actually feels the active concern wi
the conditions of modem life for which the entire group ·
praised andjor blamed, while 90 per cent are sitting ba
and counting its blessings. Mr. William Ru$her, who fo
lowed close upon Dr. Taylor's heels, alienated a small
number of students by promising to get tough and otfe
us, and never quite managing it. They were both charmi
men, and, despite their different disciplines and differin
ideologies, they had further in common an almost stunni
irrelevance both to their audience and their s11bject.
Dr. Taylor wasted an incredible an1ount of time out ·
ing, and then filling in, his unstartling diagnosis of th
causes of the student revolution, apparently without recog
nizing the irony of describing a pattern of motivation to a
audience who (at least fractionally) is supposed to be ex
riencing said pattern, and who, even if not directly involv
must have been reading very similar analyses in ever
newsmagazine. Even considering the standard of politic
awareness, and the reading habits, of the particular grou~
of students he was addressing, his one-two-three methOI&
seemed a little labored and excessive, as his assumptions!
concerning the implications of the Woodstock Festival, an]
the roots of modern radicalism, managed to be at once
vague and overstated.
Mr. Rusher, who publishes the National Review, and
successfully sustains in his rhetoric the nervous, moist:
lipped paranoia that characterizes the magazine, was per
haps more effective than Dr. Taylor, if only beca11se yo
could pretend to disagree with him and thus preserve tht
iJJusion that there was something intellectual going on. But
he spent a great deal of time laying the groundwork for,
and making references to, a lecture that never actually took
place, but dissolved from elllsive and unsatisfactory theoriz.
ing into a question-and-answer period whose implication!
he avoided by retreating into a mechanical, involuted sort
of rhetorical game.
Of course, it is always a pleasure to listen to intelligent
men whose hearts seem to be in the right place, wherever
their heads are-(and in the cases of both, that is a good
question)-but let's not pretend that it's enlightening. It is
reassuring to hear yourself (again, fractionally) praited,
and it is amusing to hear a man make the most terrifying
rationalizations palatable with wit; but since the lecture
series was not intended to amuse or reassure us, nor to
waste our time, one can only hope that future events in the
series will contribute less of amiable clutter, and more
of substance.
Interview :
hn Sekora: Black Studies
d the small college
Coming m
gleaner
Sorensen: Kennedy Legacy
by Angela &arlla
A1l the novelty of the first weeks of classes begins to
ar away, the once new faces of faculty members have
me familiar ones. One such person is !11r. John Sekora,
Columns:
"Interrogate
Inez''
by Inez Nazcol
(Gleaner co-editor Nora
Hickey interviewed Theo­dore
Sormsen on Septvnbu
28.)
istant professor of English.
i
Previous to his position at Nazareth, Mr. Sekora was a
bright scholar at the British !11useum of London, where
completed his dissertation. He also taught at St. Augus­e's
College in Raleigh, North Carolina, which is one of
e 120 black coUeges in the south. "Vanishing
Phenompha'·
by Sharon Murphy
The element of truth, the
very real feeling in Theo­dore
Sorenson's words is de­flected
a little at close range
because he never quite looks
at you. He meets your eyes,
yes, but there's no connec­tion
- his gaze is flat, his
voice even, quiet, remote. In
a sense he is excited, but in
his excitement he is as de­tached
as a prophet.
'] ne or hla chief iniA!rests, with
ich he ia very mueh Involved,
umo the problema or Blnck
• erica t«tay. Naza~th orren
course in Blade. Litenture,
ch Ia taught by Mr. S.kora.
za~tlt was attractive to Mr.
kora mainly for ita involve·
~nt in the education of inner
y odulta and ita connection
th Pro)e<t Unique.
iThe buic theme or blo Black
terature course aaya Mr. St·
ra lo "Black is not only beauty,
1t trutlt alao. It's llke a revela-
~; the road to Harlem ls like
rottd to Oamnscue.." Oln.ck
rature oflers for us a 11new
asmtnt of OUJ"S(':Jvea nnd of
'merfca.•
It io hlo belief that a Black
tudiea eourae alone miaht ju.a:t
a well be dropped unluo "tlte
bole curriculum is auffu&ad with
lnckne,. in the areas or phllos­Jby,
hittory, scie.nee, muJic,
c.." Black studies a..n valuAble
ocauH tltey offer lor the black
adent a means of dbeon.ring
e .. heritage that was robbed
om t.htm/' H@ be.Jieves too, that
lite atudentl nced Blaek studies
we.ll. The curri.eulum rnuat be
vised to Include the black ex­rit
nce in all of the humanities.
tia type of eurrieulum would
able tlte ,..hlte student to a
ew relationahip with the black
mmunfty." It would tnable him
'
1 look ~nd see people In the
etto, real people with the anme
pao and desires!'
Although a graduate or Prince­,,
Mr. Sekora NYI, "One
>uld not look to the Ivy learue
1drome tor leaderohlp in the
ld or black studies." It is
• email colleges that produce
' lcndenhip, auch na St. Au­stine'o
College, which tnught a
aek Literature coune before
wu eve.n considered at Rar·
-d.
dr. Stkora speak• or the
ck-whlte relationahip In the
llogy of marriage: uTo Uve
tcr together than separately.
bout destroying tlte lndivid-
·ench dep't plans
lW program
he French Departmenl or
:aroth College hao establlohed
AZARETH IN FRANCE Pro­m.
The lirot group repreHnt­N
.. areth in France Is I!Ched-
1 tor the Summer 19?0.
he program bas a two-Cold
;>ole. First, it Is ao deaigned
increa.ee proficiency in the
•ch language as a meana or
mu.nieat.ion. Second, the re­asibllltiet
and aocial oltua­'
encountered will undoubt·
broaden the human urn ex·
ence.
rranrtm~t.s for travel, lodg­mtala.
exnll"$iona and ela.aau
on a group basis. The eity
en for the project ia Tours,
;y oouth of Paris (8 houro by
') in the .. Touraine", The
'3ine Ia appropriately called
iardln de Ia France" with ita
titul valleys and RenalSJan<e
au.x. The length of the aea­lt
6 ,..~ks with an optional
reekt stay Cor lndepcndent
tUng. Hence a 7 week stay
>sslble.
rs. Shales is director of
:ARETH IN FRANCE, M. J.
!Ch will act as eo-dire<:tor. l n-
(CoaUnued on P"'• 4)
Student writes
from France
l tJa almost a curious phenom­enon
lO l)onrd the S.S. "France,"
the wortd'a longe.st lb,e.r, nnd to
see Ne"• York City in a dlmlniah­ing
pcropcctive. From the harbor,
very liule or the proverbial
glAmor manifests it.aelr. You
notioe only the billboardo In vari­out
tonguea, the skyscra~n hov.
ering over the aoot and grirne of
ol the city, while the people on
the pier fade into toy mannekins,
.:lmll waving farewell.
Almoot suddenly you diocoYer
youralf a mt:mbe.r of a eity in
minjature, aomewhat allt-n to
both or the eontinentl she pcr­pelually
vlsitl. And ns thla float­ing
city slowly relinquiahet tlte
shelter of the mainland, a re.st­lessntla
~eizes your bloodamam.
You want to mo,·e., to do tome­thin~
r, anything to haoten tlte
parting from shore. You step
onto the streets and avenues
which you will roam for almost
five days. You search out the by­waya
which lead to solitude, the
boulevards of laughter and cock­tails,
the room of wine and gour­met
dinlng, the cabin where you
will pus your nighta and per­haps
part or your days. And you
smile, and your eyes wJderl with
incredulity at the luxury which
i.:. yuura.,
But aoon, with a ohock like a
sudd"n thunder, you begin to
notice the mo"·ement bt.neath
you.r teet. There are carpeted
hallway• but there ja no more
land. There are department
storea and aalons., pools and gym­nasiuma,
but the..re It no more
freedom. You are a c.itiztn of the
sea and aubject to her whlmo Cor
five daya. And you rebel. You
have not jiLit lett your c:ountry
which you may or may not love,
you have alao left terra firma
nnd your being misses her. Your
•tomnch twlate nnd tho corridors
t.urn a.nd your every tltort at
mot1on becomes a weaving rYJ"&·
tion. Slowly you learn that to
live with tlte aea i3 to move with
the oea. and time loses slpili­eance
and days are only names.
And hn.vlng learned, you ponder
your teachers who ecrve you
completely with a dillgence nkin
to devotion. Their moat frequent
title Ia tte-rd: room, deck. and
dinin« room, but tomethin.g un­nameable
mystillell you. Although
many of them have f'amHies
ashore, they are also n'ost surely
married to the sea. Twelve hours
compriae their work day which
would tatisrue most men beyond
endurance. but which only aerveo
to whel tliem for another day
and another voyag.,. And each of
them exudes tlte Continental
charm now famous as Frcneh.
(Continued on P~ge 4)
More
Faculty member publishes 3rd book
BE GENTLE, APIUI... That Is
tho tille of Francesca Gull'a third
book or poetry, published lost
May J 969 by the Golden Quill
Press of F-ranceetown, New
Hampahire.
&u., Gull teaches Freohman
English and Creating Writing at
Nazareth and is the &\lt.hor it I
SING OF SUMMER, her firot
publiahed collection or poetry
(1964) and TRE BOY AND THE
STARS ( 1965) n beautifully il­luatrated
..,rae-storY of tltt child
Dante. The pid.uru, in full eolor,
FRANCESCA GULl
are t.he work of Patricia Walsh,
formerly of the Nunreth College
Art Deportment nnd now Prores­aor
or Art at the Cnli!omia Col­lege
or Arts and Cmrto. "A
c.harminr children's book/' eulo­gized
Frank Kappler or Ll FE
magaslne.
Chronologically apeaklng, BE
GENTLE. APRIL is the author's
rlrat collection and includes in
poet'a own words, .,Poems writ­ten
in my mother's houae/in the
day, of Faith/in a Ume of un­truth.
a Ume of dreaminr," and
a~ aa tlte aub-tltle indicates the
usonp and sonnet& of a young
girl ln Jove/'
Theorode Weiss, poet ond
Prinecton professor, a&YI or Mi$$
Gull's writing: 1
' ( admire the
puaton, the pure intense lyrid•m
or her poetry. The expruoion of
Corthricht d~p feelin1r Ia rare.
never more so than in an ultra ..
negative, eelf-.conscious, .elf-de­precntlng
age like ours. Thus
her poetry becomes, even p.aat
itself, a real da.ring.''
Mloa Gull has completed two
more volumes of new poems and
is cunently at work on th~
sequel to the Dante atory, espc­cially
deolgned for young adults,
entitled DANTE'S TEENAGE
LOVE. Her beoks may be ob­tained
nt the College beokatore
or may be ordered directly (rom
tho pubUaher.
Hygenic PROTECTS
Your Investments
A Professional Exterminating Se rvice
All work done by contract
HYGENIC
Sanitation Company. Inc.
The NATIONAL POETRY PRESS
wnounces
The closing date for the submission of manuscripts by College Students is
ANY S1·uoENT attending cit her junior or senior collcge is eligible to submit
his vc~. There is no limi~tion "' to form or theme. Shorter works •~ pre·
fer~d by the Boud of Judges, beausc of ;pa~ limit>.tions.
Each poem must be 1YPEO or PRJNTED on a ~pante shed, and must
bear the NAME and HOME ADDRESS of the srudcnts, and the COLLEGE
ADDRESS as well.
MANUSCRIPTS should be sent to the Ofi'ICE OF THE PRESS
NATIONAL POETRY PRESS
~210 Sclby Avenue Los An~les. ulif. 90034
He may in fact be one: he
is a man who has had a
great deal, and lost much of
it, and become conscious of
the fact that life as we know
it holds few consolat.ions for
the loss of a dream. At such
an impasse he has several
alternatives; like the Ken­nedys
he mourns and emu­lates,
he has chosen pubUe
life, the attempt to alter the
shape of life to make room
for a new dream, or tor the
r~mergence of the old. He
speaks of dreams, in a pro­phetic
tone, with a prophet's
vocabulary: he speaks of
'inspiration,' of a 'profound
challenge,' of 'God's purpose
in creating man'.
The marrow of the proph­ecy
is-of course-the 'Ken­nedy
legacy': the title, in­terestingly,
of his forthcom­ing
book. It will probably be
the theme of hill campaign
when he attempts to capture
the Democratic nomination
for the New York State Sen­ate
seat once held by Robert
Kennedy. He is willing to
spenk, guardedly, on issues,
willing to outline sketchily
his plan for withdrawal
from Vietnam, or to ques­tion
the nature of the 'lib­eralism'
espoused by Senator
ChnJ•Ies Goodell. the man
who may be his opponent;
but he returns always to his
vision of the Kennedy leg­acy.
He speaks of the legacy
tenderly, treasuringly, almost
fanatically: he is not very
definite about what it is, nor
about what his attempts to
implement it might be. He
talks of restoring the 'Iib­era',
the Aristotelian con­cept
of freedom within the
will, to the debased, out­worn
structure of present­day
liberalism in America;
he does not say how. When
pressed for definitions he
turns bland and noncommit­al;
it may be that he is wait­ing
for the campaign to be­gin,
that he doesn't want to
leave his fight in the locker
room; it may be that he ill
saving his answers and him­self
for the professionals;
but isn't the kind of liberal­ism
he believes in, Integral
rather than reactionary, dis­tinguished
by belief in the
people?
It doesn't seem likely that
he will be able to resolve
these conflicts into clarity,
or even into comprehensibil­ity;
but, although he's never
going to make it as a con­versationalist,
he may make
it as a compaigner. The ex­pression
that at close range
approximates an epileptic:
trance, has a kind of earn­est,
almost charismatic fer­vor
when it broods over a
speaker's podium. And he
uses all the right words,­the
words that turned people
on in 1960 and have haunted
them ever since - and he
uses them as if be really
(Conllnued on Pase 4)
Page Four GLEANE R
VIETNAM Moratorium • •
Peaceful Action at the Nazareth-Fisher Moratorium Day. See next week's Gleaner.
Henderson
Law
(Continued from Page I)
7) Exhorting. ineiting or cona
oplrinto with :my peraon,
whether or not a member,
to urry out MY or the
above-mentioned prohlbi~
aet:ivitiu..
Any member who violatea any
of the afo~said regul•tione will
he subject to suspension or ox­pulsion
from the College, arrest
and ejection from the campus.
Any non·member who engages
in nny of the foregoing prohibit­ed
activities will be cjceted (rom
the CA.mpus nnd dealt with in nc·
cordnnce with the law.
There will be no hesitation to
invoke the physical presc.nee or
tho law if it is doomed nec<!..,.ry
to en!o~ the ~lations. To do
oo does not destroy the College
CGmmunity, but on the ~nLnt.f)·
failure to do so under appropri­ate
cirna.rnsta.noes may well ha,·e
that .rreet-ln
establishing these regula­f..
ions in compliance with law, we
do not '""'k to ereat<! the order
or security of a. jail on this earn­pus;
we do seek to avoid the di8·
order nnd insecurity which fol­lows
aa the night the day any
and all attempts to substitute
force for reason-a tactic now
euphemisctic:ally referred to as
lht ''new polities or con(ronta·
tion."
We are determined to avoid
damage lo the physical plant of
the College but more important,
we will take whate\·e.r means are
neet$$llry to prevent the deatNC•
tion of the spirit and id•als for
whl<h this College stands and for
which so many before us ha\'e
glven their toil and tears, and
even t.heir lives, to bring it to its
present atnte of frujtion.
l t. is in this spirit that theM
regulations are now promulgnttd
nnd it is "-'<J'OC~ thnt they will
be accepted in the same api rit..
THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Letter from
abroad
(Continued lrom Page 3)
Of c:ourae there nre the ship­bonrtl
romuncca. (He: uMade­moi&
f'lleJ 1'rn in lov~ with >'OU.
Whl\1. must. I do?., She: "Kill
YOUI'SCir." Uut the ie..'\ is now
lovely, ond wild nnd free. And
tho eoaat ol England in the dis­tan(
t M midnight. is magical and
txhiiBrating. And you don't want
to aleep and )'Ou almost can't
aleep-tornorrow means Franee.
You bid .. au revoir" to your city.
ahip and ita ~re:w, and )·ou Jeav~
a bit of heart with the "Pra.nee''
u you alep off the gangplank
and the ounlight nuhes - "Bon­jour.
Ia France!"
Nazareth in Fran(e
(Continued rro91 Page 3)
itinl respontle hns been so g-re::1t,
thl\t. tent.ntive plnns Cor an entire
MAdemi( year abroad sponsored
by N• ... reth College are being
mAd~.
for further dttails. J»lease con·
BUSINESS OPPORTUNinES
f'or Snle: t' ull·length raceoon
eo>~- On dlspl•y. Nora Jllckey's
loeker. $30.
Earn your high school equlva­leney
degree while attending
Naza.relh College. See Bonnie
Meath-
PERSONALS
Underground basketball? ~
Sue S.Jaekus. K219 or Gym-
Palms rend. life-cycle num·
bers determined. $.10 -.25 - 1.00.
Nora llltkey.
Remedbl Tbeolocr. Marlrose
Blum-
Will one of the teJe11hone
men J)lt.asc t•l ck up the tele­phone?
Uo you have anything you want to buy.
sell, or communicate? See Chr is Ki Uory.
Sorensen
(Continued from PO!• 3)
knew what they meAn~
Wherever his imagination i'l
taking him, he has on~
which factor alone make~
him speeial among politi~
cians. He is a profoundlr
distur bed man, but there b
so much cause in all our
lives for <listurbance, that
his turmoil is admirable and'
perhaps in<lispensible-
ETA slates GRE
(Contlnued Crorn Page 2)
or fellowships to which one lo •P­plying.
Scores are usually ,..port-1
ed to graduate school live weektr
after a test date.
The Graduate Record Exam­inations
include. nn Aptitude Teat
or geneml S<:holastic ability and
Advanced Teats meaaurinc
achievement in 21 major Ueldt
or study_ Full detalla and ~ri•
tn.tinn rnrm- fnr th111 f:RF ,.,.

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Transcript

~ETW COLLIGI: OF AOCNIESTER
".;
XXV - No. 3
'rusfees accept
tfenderson Law
This Memorandum is not. prompted by past evtnt.a on our tllmpus
d by any antieipalco with an enactment by the New York Stator on A1>rll 21, !969. The law requires "that all
egea and unjver$ilie• In t.hia St.nte adopt rules nud regulntlons for
maintenance ot public order and a program for the enforcement
reol.n The same Act rtqulres that such rules and regulation• be
It with the ~!<>gents of tho Statd lolr. and Mrs. A. J. Thomall,
l-president.s of the Nau.reth
olle«< Parents' A-lation.
Rt::GULATIONS
The following actiono by an
member of the community, acting
either alone or in concert with
others, or by any orraniz.ation.
are prohibilc:rnt.ie A~
tion, the Nat..ion&l Student Mar­keting
CorPOrntion. tL11d many
students nnd Jmrcnts who deluged
CAB offitersona to trnvel
b)' air at nn early age th~ fares
will ineulutc habill • . . whic::h
,.;11 be reflected In a recn researching the war,
including statistics, stands taken by various officials, State
Depm'tment bulletins and bills on the floor in Congress.
This information will be synthesized, printed, and made
available to students and anyone else intet·ested in learning
the various facts and opinions on the war, both pro and con.
Petitions to end the war will be available in the cafeterias
and outside the Union on i\Iondny and Tuesday for student
signatures and will be sent to local, state. and federal of­ficials.
Two weeks ago, the Student
Council \''as .ppproa.ched nnd gnv~
ita urulnlmous aus>port. to the dny
of penoo, 01 wt'.ll ns \"OUng n do­untion
or fifty dol1nrs. Although
\'arioue ~t-hooJ officials have also
been taJ)proachtd. there is no ad·
mini1tra\h·e aupport for the mor·
atorium. Each fac:ult).,. member
wa. eonta~l pt':l'S()nally in an
atttmp&. to gain support a.nd tn·
dortemtnt for the statement of
purposej nnd a student rep~sent­a\
ivc mt't ·with interested fBeulty
n1embert lost Thunwlay morning.
The Vit'Lnnm Mon~torh1m on
October IG is only a beg-inning,
l'L~ordlng to K:u~n. TheN' nre
plane for a two--day nntionnl
mnrch on \Vaahington in No\·~m­ber.
a three-da)' obsel"\•:tn~e in
Dectmbtr and 80 on until the: war
ends.
Tht Monltorium began T11esda)
noon at tht> ft:a.gpole near the
Arts C
n individuals unprepared or too lethargic to think
about the issues truly involved, the result may be a con­flagration
none of us could possibly handle.
The popular response to this week's Peace Moratorium
seemed to exemplify how some people may be persuaded to
jump onto the bandwagon without thoroughly examining
the principles involved. Nationally the day was designed to
be a political move-even if it necessitated expressing ideas
at the expense of national reputation. Even though U.S.
involvement in Vietnam has earned much warranted criti­cism,
the issues involved may not be accurately presented in
a partisan movement. When facts are thrust together in
an arbitrary manner, when uninformed people wear ann­bands
as a pseudo-effort to be conscientious, the impressions
yielded may be ultimately more misleading than deliberate
lies.
Smoke and flames may distort our vision. In my opin­ion,
llf-Day was more than a test of strength for anti-war
fooling; it (nlong with many othe1· cun-..nt issues) Is a chal­lenge
to examine thoroughly the ideas we decide to support
and-then-to communicate them; it is a warning not to be
so caught up in the heatrof-the-day that we fail to be aware
of the forces that affect the way we feel, the way we think,
and the way we act.
ETA slates GRE
PRINCETON, NJ. - Educa­tional
Teatlng Service announced
that undergraduates and othera
preparing te go te gnduate
tehool may take the Graduate
Record &xeminationa on any o·f
llix different test datea durinr
the ~urrent aeademic year.
The rirat teatinr date ror the
GRE is October 25, 1969. Seorea
rrom thia administration will be
reported te the rraduate scl>ooit
before December I. After Oc­tober
lOt there is no guara.ntee
that applications ror the Oct<>ber
test date can be prooeued.
The othtr five teat datet are
Oeoolo
'Ibe Ot .. MI' ll DUbllabtd WHJtty­enry
Wtd:nMd&J-dgrfnw the nplar
t.eadem.lc ,_r at N~ CoU•1• ot
::.~='r~~ ~::;·.-~
~&dltol"t ... -.- t..o.l.U. O.Nwe
Nora BJeke)'
N..,. FAilor , .. .. $hlrlu ~lana
F..wr. r.dJtor --·- Aa.Pla Sc-ufta.
Art Editor _ &oaaS. K•tJa
rums __ Qar1• xn...,.
Pho~ Editor
Mary Ann c..t:u.lll
News Phl>tot'rapNr P•ula S.tt.TIY
Splrttoat Advlaor _ Ma.,. Doorolo.t
~\ 10 u.. S.A. Slrlaroa llG:t'Oh7
B~ KaM.~W L:t7 M•M
~W. s~,:-Bi~i:,":ln~S:~~".;
~:"M'::.~ li.M; .i::aMH'!'~!!::
AK.artt hSye a"l"' "" - J'itoht1,a £Qhrt.
JU'*""" o·sn ...
Adnrililn.r M'a.rla BeTIUo
Dl•ulbuUon ···- ·-·-.. J~n• O'Brlen,
Ka'hy ~wlq
,_ ~ la • --"" of tiM
lrd
IAU offers
scholarships
Five scl>olanhi}a of $1,000
ucll ue available to atudente
applying to the Institute tor
American Univenltlea for an ac ..
ademic yenr at Alx-en-Provence,
in aouthem France. The lnsti·
tute, charurt-year period when
dent$ have been more radl
than it ever has betol"fl. Ove
re(Orml have fiMJiy taken p
The studenta are ait.ting on
ministrat.ive counc:Hs And hel
to mnke curriculum decisions
in ...,neral, etreuld not look to the Ivy learue
1drome tor leaderohlp in the
ld or black studies." It is
• email colleges that produce
' lcndenhip, auch na St. Au­stine'o
College, which tnught a
aek Literature coune before
wu eve.n considered at Rar·
-d.
dr. Stkora speak• or the
ck-whlte relationahip In the
llogy of marriage: uTo Uve
tcr together than separately.
bout destroying tlte lndivid-
·ench dep't plans
lW program
he French Departmenl or
:aroth College hao establlohed
AZARETH IN FRANCE Pro­m.
The lirot group repreHnt­N
.. areth in France Is I!Ched-
1 tor the Summer 19?0.
he program bas a two-Cold
;>ole. First, it Is ao deaigned
increa.ee proficiency in the
•ch language as a meana or
mu.nieat.ion. Second, the re­asibllltiet
and aocial oltua­'
encountered will undoubt·
broaden the human urn ex·
ence.
rranrtm~t.s for travel, lodg­mtala.
exnll"$iona and ela.aau
on a group basis. The eity
en for the project ia Tours,
;y oouth of Paris (8 houro by
') in the .. Touraine", The
'3ine Ia appropriately called
iardln de Ia France" with ita
titul valleys and RenalSJansslble.
rs. Shales is director of
:ARETH IN FRANCE, M. J.
!Ch will act as eo-dire.tions.
Each poem must be 1YPEO or PRJNTED on a ~pante shed, and must
bear the NAME and HOME ADDRESS of the srudcnts, and the COLLEGE
ADDRESS as well.
MANUSCRIPTS should be sent to the Ofi'ICE OF THE PRESS
NATIONAL POETRY PRESS
~210 Sclby Avenue Los An~les. ulif. 90034
He may in fact be one: he
is a man who has had a
great deal, and lost much of
it, and become conscious of
the fact that life as we know
it holds few consolat.ions for
the loss of a dream. At such
an impasse he has several
alternatives; like the Ken­nedys
he mourns and emu­lates,
he has chosen pubUe
life, the attempt to alter the
shape of life to make room
for a new dream, or tor the
r~mergence of the old. He
speaks of dreams, in a pro­phetic
tone, with a prophet's
vocabulary: he speaks of
'inspiration,' of a 'profound
challenge,' of 'God's purpose
in creating man'.
The marrow of the proph­ecy
is-of course-the 'Ken­nedy
legacy': the title, in­terestingly,
of his forthcom­ing
book. It will probably be
the theme of hill campaign
when he attempts to capture
the Democratic nomination
for the New York State Sen­ate
seat once held by Robert
Kennedy. He is willing to
spenk, guardedly, on issues,
willing to outline sketchily
his plan for withdrawal
from Vietnam, or to ques­tion
the nature of the 'lib­eralism'
espoused by Senator
ChnJ•Ies Goodell. the man
who may be his opponent;
but he returns always to his
vision of the Kennedy leg­acy.
He speaks of the legacy
tenderly, treasuringly, almost
fanatically: he is not very
definite about what it is, nor
about what his attempts to
implement it might be. He
talks of restoring the 'Iib­era',
the Aristotelian con­cept
of freedom within the
will, to the debased, out­worn
structure of present­day
liberalism in America;
he does not say how. When
pressed for definitions he
turns bland and noncommit­al;
it may be that he is wait­ing
for the campaign to be­gin,
that he doesn't want to
leave his fight in the locker
room; it may be that he ill
saving his answers and him­self
for the professionals;
but isn't the kind of liberal­ism
he believes in, Integral
rather than reactionary, dis­tinguished
by belief in the
people?
It doesn't seem likely that
he will be able to resolve
these conflicts into clarity,
or even into comprehensibil­ity;
but, although he's never
going to make it as a con­versationalist,
he may make
it as a compaigner. The ex­pression
that at close range
approximates an epileptic:
trance, has a kind of earn­est,
almost charismatic fer­vor
when it broods over a
speaker's podium. And he
uses all the right words,­the
words that turned people
on in 1960 and have haunted
them ever since - and he
uses them as if be really
(Conllnued on Pase 4)
Page Four GLEANE R
VIETNAM Moratorium • •
Peaceful Action at the Nazareth-Fisher Moratorium Day. See next week's Gleaner.
Henderson
Law
(Continued from Page I)
7) Exhorting. ineiting or cona
oplrinto with :my peraon,
whether or not a member,
to urry out MY or the
above-mentioned prohlbi~
aet:ivitiu..
Any member who violatea any
of the afo~said regul•tione will
he subject to suspension or ox­pulsion
from the College, arrest
and ejection from the campus.
Any non·member who engages
in nny of the foregoing prohibit­ed
activities will be cjceted (rom
the CA.mpus nnd dealt with in nc·
cordnnce with the law.
There will be no hesitation to
invoke the physical presc.nee or
tho law if it is doomed nec'OU.
Whl\1. must. I do?., She: "Kill
YOUI'SCir." Uut the ie..'\ is now
lovely, ond wild nnd free. And
tho eoaat ol England in the dis­tan(
t M midnight. is magical and
txhiiBrating. And you don't want
to aleep and )'Ou almost can't
aleep-tornorrow means Franee.
You bid .. au revoir" to your city.
ahip and ita ~re:w, and )·ou Jeav~
a bit of heart with the "Pra.nee''
u you alep off the gangplank
and the ounlight nuhes - "Bon­jour.
Ia France!"
Nazareth in Fran(e
(Continued rro91 Page 3)
itinl respontle hns been so g-re::1t,
thl\t. tent.ntive plnns Cor an entire
MAdemi( year abroad sponsored
by N• ... reth College are being
mAd~.
for further dttails. J»lease con·
BUSINESS OPPORTUNinES
f'or Snle: t' ull·length raceoon
eo>~- On dlspl•y. Nora Jllckey's
loeker. $30.
Earn your high school equlva­leney
degree while attending
Naza.relh College. See Bonnie
Meath-
PERSONALS
Underground basketball? ~
Sue S.Jaekus. K219 or Gym-
Palms rend. life-cycle num·
bers determined. $.10 -.25 - 1.00.
Nora llltkey.
Remedbl Tbeolocr. Marlrose
Blum-
Will one of the teJe11hone
men J)lt.asc t•l ck up the tele­phone?
Uo you have anything you want to buy.
sell, or communicate? See Chr is Ki Uory.
Sorensen
(Continued from PO!• 3)
knew what they meAn~
Wherever his imagination i'l
taking him, he has on~
which factor alone make~
him speeial among politi~
cians. He is a profoundlr
distur bed man, but there b
so much cause in all our
lives for